*465 OPINION ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
(Opinion, January 13, 1998, 5th Cir., 1998,
The petition for rehearing is granted. The opinion reported at
This is a case about mistaken identity, and it comes to us on appeal from a denial of qualified immunity in a § 1983 suit brought by plaintiffs Oscar F. Sanchez (Sanchez) and Liliana Sanchez against a number of public officials. 1 Sanchez alleged that he was illegally detained for twenty-six hours in violation of his due process rights. The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that they were entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law. The magistrate judge held that the defendants’ motion should be granted. After conducting a de novo review of the record, the district court declined to follow the magistrate’s recommendation, holding that the defendants were not entitled to qualified immunity because Sanchez had shown that he was deprived of a clearly established constitutional right and that there was a disputed issue of material fact about whether the defendants acted in an objectively reasonable manner. The defendants now appeal. We reverse and remand this case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
On August 20, 1992, Sanchez arrived at Houston’s Intercontinental Airport from Mexico at approximately 7:50 p.m. When Sanchez passed through the United States Customs Service, a Customs agent matched his name and general description to a fugitive warrant issued from Cheatham County, Tennessee. Because of the match, Sanchez was detained. Defendant John Chandler was the sheriff of Cheatham County; defendant Floyd Duncan was an investigator in the criminal investigation division of Cheat-ham County’s Sheriffs Department; and Sarah Hunter was a dispatcher with the Cheat-ham County Sheriffs Department.
That same night, at approximately 8:33 p.m., the Cheatham County Sheriffs Department, through dispatcher Hunter, received a request from Customs at the Intercontinental Airport in Houston for confirmation that a person named “Osear F. Sanchez” was still wanted. The Cheatham County’s Sheriffs Department, acting through either Hunter or investigator Duncan, responded at 8:46 p.m. that a person by the name of “Oscar F. Sanchez” was, in fact, still wanted.
At 8:59 p.m., Duncan received a message from Customs in Houston that proceedings had been initiated to take custody of “Sanchez.” At 9:36 p.m., Duncan faxed to Customs in Houston identifying information, including photographs, fingerprint copies, and other information, including the fact that the wanted “Sanchez” had a tattoo of a rose on his left shoulder.
A unit from the Houston Police Department (HPD) was dispatched to Customs at approximately 10:29 p.m. Defendant Officer Warren K. Haywood arrived at the airport at approximately 11:24 p.m. Defendant Officer Michael S. Lewellen received a phone call and authorized a “fugitive hold” on Sanchez. Shortly after 12:15 a.m. on August 21, 1992, Officer Haywood transported Sanchez to HPD headquarters.
*466 Later that day, defendant Officer W.H. Bearden along with defendant Sergeant P. Pohl brought Sanchez before a Harris County, Texas probable cause court at which time Sanchez refused to waive extradition proceedings. During the probable cause hearing, Sanchez claimed his innocence and argued that he was not the person named in the Cheatham County fugitive warrant. During that hearing, Officer Bearden noticed that Sanchez did not have the same tattoo on his shoulder that was described in the warrant from Tennessee. At the conclusion of the probable cause hearing, the judge ordered defendant Sheriff Johnny Klevenhagen to hold Sanchez until his (Sanchez’s) identification could be confirmed. Officer Bearden then took Sanchez to the Harris County jail. Sanchez was searched and placed in a cell with other offenders.
Pursuant to the judge’s request, defendant Officer Barry J. McDermott compared the fingerprints provided by Cheatham County against those of Sanchez. They did not match. Sanchez was released from custody at approximately 9:00 p.m. on August 21, 1992 — about twenty-six hours after his initial detention by Customs agents at the airport, two hours and twenty-five minutes after he had been placed in the Harris County jail, and before he was even booked at the jail. Assistant District Attorney Bill Delmore filed a motion to dismiss the fugitive complaint against Sanchez on September 1,1992. 2
Sanchez and his wife brought a § 1983 civil rights suit against a number of public officials, claiming that Sanchez had been deprived of a clearly established constitutional right and that the officials involved in his twenty-six hour “ordeal” acted unreasonably. 3 The defendants moved for summary judgment on the ground that they were entitled to qualified immunity, and a magistrate judge agreed. However, the district court declined to follow this recommendation and denied the defendants’ motion. This appeal followed. We have jurisdiction 4 and now reverse.
DISCUSSION
We begin by noting that ADA Delmore challenges the district court’s rejection of the magistrate’s recommendation that Delmore be accorded absolute and qualified immunity from suit. Under the test for qualified immunity, Sanchez has failed to prove that he was deprived of a clearly established constitutional right. Because we find that no conduct by the defendants’ deprived the plaintiff of a clearly established constitutional right, we need not reach the issue of absolute immunity. Instead, we conclude that it is only necessary to address the qualified immunity claims of the defendants.
I. Ake the Defendants Entitled to Qualified Immunity as a Matter of Law?
A. The Doctrine of Qualified Immunity
The well-established test for qualified immunity requires us to engage in a two-step inquiry. First, we must determine whether a public official’s conduct deprived a § 1983 plaintiff of a “clearly established” constitutional or statutory right.
See Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Second, a public official may successfully assert the defense of qualified immunity even though the official violates a person’s civil rights, provided the official’s conduct was objectively reasonable.
Mouille v. City of Live Oak,
This two-part test sits atop a firm policy foundation. Foremost among these policy considerations is the deterrent effect that civil liability may have on the willingness of public officials to fully discharge their professional duties.
See Pierson v. Ray,
B. Analysis
With these background principles in mind, we now turn to the merits of this appeal. Sanchez alleges that he was wrongfully detained and falsely imprisoned by the defendants when they knew that he was not the person wanted on the fugitive warrant. Notably, Sanchez does not attack the validity of the warrant, which he concedes had been issued for “Oscar F. Sanchez” with his date of birth and social security number. Sanchez argues instead that because the defendants were in possession of the actual suspect’s photographs, fingerprints, and information that the suspect had a rose tattoo on his left shoulder within two hours after Sanchez’s initial detention, the defendants had “conclusive proof’ that he was not the person wanted on the outstanding arrest warrant. From this, Sanchez concludes that his constitutional rights were violated because no one compared his fingerprints to those of the suspect until almost twenty-four hours after his initial detention.
We disagree, go no further than step one of the qualified immunity analysis, and conclude that Sanchez has not shown that the defendants deprived him of a clearly established constitutional right.
In
Baker v. McCollan,
We find that the facts of this case come within the compass of Baker; in fact, we fail to see any meaningful distinction between Baker and this case. Federal law enforce *469 ment officials and officials from Houston and Chatham County, Tennessee held Sanchez on the basis of a valid arrest warrant. Those same officials also declined to release Sanchez even though he consistently asserted his innocence. Under these facts, Baker compels the conclusion that the actions of the defendants in this case did not deprive Sanchez of any clearly established constitutional right.
That law enforcement officials were in possession of information that exculpated Sanchez does not change this result. Although we have held that illegal detention by way of false imprisonment is a recognized § 1983 tort,
Simmons v. McElveen,
CONCLUSION
Finding that Sanchez has not shown that he has been deprived of a clearly established constitutional right, we hold that all defendants named in Sanchez’s § 1983 suit are entitled to qualified immunity as a matter of law. Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court’s conclusion to the contrary and REMAND this case to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The named defendants are as follows: Inspector Charles Swyden, Inspector Robert Poole, Officer Warren K. Hayward, Sergeant Michael S. Lewellen, Officer W.H. Bearden, Officer Barry J. McDermott, Sergeant P. Pohl, Police Chief Sam Nuchia, Lieutenant Frank Jackson, Captain Mark V. Mancuso, Sergeant Andrew White, Sergeant Judy Porter, Sheriff Johnny Klevenhagen, Assistant District Attorney Bill Delmore, Dispatcher Sarah Hunter, Investigator Floyd Duncan, and Sheriff John P. Chandler. Sanchez also sued unnamed persons employed by the United States of America, unnamed persons employed by the City of Houston, unnamed persons employed by Harris County, Texas, and unnamed persons employed by Cheatham County, Tennessee.
. The motion operated as a procedural device to remove the fugitive complaint from the docket of the county criminal court.
. Mrs. Sanchez only asserted state-law causes of action.
.See Mitchell v. Forsyth,
.
See Kernats v. O'Sullivan,
.
See Babb v. Dorman,
.Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Harlow,
the Court's determination of whether a public official’s actions were reasonable included a subjective component.
See Wood v. Strickland,
. Of course, the Court qualified this statement and suggested that at some point, even though law enforcement officials are proceeding pursuant to a valid warrant in the face of protestations of innocence, detention of that individual would run afoul of the Constitution.
. This conclusion makes perfect sense in light of the important policy underlying qualified immunity, namely, that public officials should not be deterred from discharging their professional obligations out of fear of civil liability.
. Both Sanchez and the district court point to the testimony of one defendant which illustrates the view that Sanchez should have been released sooner. It is ironic that Sanchez chose to name so many defendants and now relies on the testimony of a single defendant for his claim that the defendants deprived him of his constitutional right to due process. In any event, the mere fact that one of the actors in the events surrounding Sanchez's detention believed that Sanchez was not the person named in the warrant does not alter our conclusion that there was an ongoing debate among the officers as to whether Sanchez was the Tennessee fugitive.
